Net Zero Is Not Zero Published: 8 November 2021 Recent carbon-neutrality pledges may seem ambitious, but merely serve to promote a new set of false climate solutions under a different guise. Such pledges may persuade many people, but the climate isn’t buying it.
Giant Satrey: the strength of contemporary Cambodian women Published: 3 November 2021 Violence against women and environmental pollution: current social issues are embodied in contemporary and symbolic pieces by the dance company New Cambodian Artists.
Introduction Published: 2 November 2021 This dossier provides a diverse selection of strong civil society voices from Cambodia. We hope that the analyses and contributions included will lead to a better understanding of the results, impacts and successes of the actions of Cambodian civil society.
New Rights, Old Freedom Published: 2 November 2021 Poetry is an important form of expression for everyday and social issues in Cambodia, providing an important voice in increasingly shrinking spaces. The award-winning poem by Chhoy Phanith gives insights into the aspirations and hopes of young Cambodians.
50 Years of International Environmental Policy Published: 23 May 2022 The conference Stockholm+50 takes place five decades after the 1972 UN Conference on the Human Environment. We not only want to look back at 50 years of global environmental policy, but also look forward and ask: What can we do better so that the necessary transformation still succeeds?
Collective Feminist Leadership: Unlearning the Me, Me, Me Published: 29 October 2021 This article is an effort to ground feminist leadership in what the author(s) deem to be its essence: transformative collective power for the common good of all nature.
Ambiguously Democratic: Parties, Coalitions, and Candidates in the 2022 Philippine Elections Published: 28 October 2021 Elections in the Philippines is a time of alliances, pundits, politicking within and across party lines. A range of candidates have put themselves forward for the upcoming 2022 elections, though their agendas and positions may still be too cloudy for voters to make a clear bet. Persistent problems around politics are present, although reform via the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) is slowly taking place. There’s still plenty of time ahead for unpredictability, by prospective candidates and the voting population.
Real ambition vs. false solutions: What’s at stake during COP26? Published: 27 October 2021 COP26 takes place against the backdrop of nationalist health policies with daunting consequences, failed promises to adequately scale up climate action and financial support, and an unprecedented push for false solutions that divert global attention from the urgent need to phase out fossil fuels.
Broken Promises - Developed countries fail to keep their 100 billion dollar climate pledge Published: 26 October 2021 At the climate summit in Glasgow (COP 26), the issue of climate finance is inextricably linked to success or failure. In Glasgow, past failures and shortcomings in climate finance mobilization and delivery must be ruthlessly addressed by presenting an implementation plan for future improvements.
Debt Relief for Green and Inclusive Recovery Published: 16 May 2022 The Project Debt Relief for Green and Inclusive Recovery (DRGR) was conceived in the summer of 2020 to advance innovative solutions to address the sovereign debt crisis that many countries in the Global South are facing at a time when social progress is under threat and urgent climate action is needed.
China’s Firm Grip on the AIIB Published: 19 October 2021 In the run-up to the annual meeting of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) on October 26–28, the Heinrich Böll Foundation presents an analysis of what transparency requirements the AIIB has met following the review of its Environmental and Social Framework for financing. China controls the Bank, but European countries such as Germany and France are shareholders. They have always justified their participation in the AIIB by wanting to enforce high environmental and social standards and more transparency.
Climate Action Network: “We know our duty and responsibility” Published: 19 October 2021 CAN – the Climate Action Network - is the largest international civil society network, that has monitored the UN climate negotiations for many years. Whether at national or international level, how can civil society participation be ensured at all in times of pandemic? What does this mean for the capacity for action and strategy of a global network like CAN? A conversation between Tasneem Essop, Executive Director of CAN International and Barbara Unmüßig, President of the Heinrich Böll Foundation
Beyond the hype: How to shape the green hydrogen economy Published: 19 October 2021 The prospect of a green hydrogen economy comes with significant opportunities and risks. There is a need to both promote and carefully shape the much needed expansion of production, while limiting the end use of green hydrogen.
Civil society voices on the fight against gender based violence in Cambodia Published: 15 October 2021 Gender-based violence, participation in political and social processes and shrinking spaces: How do women's rights activists work under increasingly constrained circumstances in Cambodia?
Sexual and reproductive rights, Volume 11 (only available in German) Published: 14 October 2021 Women's bodies are always the central target of conservative and fundamentalist ideology and practice. The individual rights are also shaped by social and cultural norms, legal conditions and, more than ever, also determined by reproductive technologies and medical offers. The essay by sociologist Christa Wichterich offers background information and analytical approaches from an international perspective.
“Self-managed abortion empowers people with an unwanted pregnancy” Published: 14 October 2021 Interview with Alicia Baier and Sophie G., who are both activists, on the occasion of International Safe Abortion Day.
Population policy under the guise of protecting life – the history of Section 218 Published: 14 October 2021 Section 218 has been a topic of intense political debate ever since it was first incorporated in the Criminal Code of the German Empire on 15 May 1871. It has always been one of the most controversial paragraphs in German law, both legally and socially. In 1995, a compromise solution was found, but since then nothing more has changed. To find out why that is so, and work out what can be done about it, it’s worth taking a look back at the history of Section 218.
150 years of Germany’s abortion ban ‒ when will the “green tide” wash over to the other side of the Atlantic? Published: 14 October 2021 The “marea verde” – the “green tide” – has spread across the whole of Latin America. Can it make waves in Germany too?
An introduction to reproductive justice Published: 14 October 2021 Feminist movements that focus exclusively on abortion rights primarily represent the perspective of white, privileged women. Reproductive justice goes further, combining reproductive rights with social justice.
Twenty years later, remembering a Tuesday in September Published: 13 October 2021 Looking back, now with Information Age lenses, 9/11’s aftermath lessons are full of virtues, yet to be capitalized.
“Quiet” Civic Engagement in Contemporary Visual Art from Cambodia Published: 12 October 2021 While political and social avenues for free speech are limited and prohibited, Cambodian visual artists find limitless forms of creative expression to critically examine many complex urban, social and environmental concerns.
Reflecting on 9/11, perspectives from a young American Published: 12 October 2021 The twentieth anniversary of 9/11 and the United States’ disastrous pullout from Afghanistan has prompted a reckoning. But it’s not a new one.
“We must develop a joint vision for Germany and for Europe” Published: 8 October 2021 Franziska Brantner MdB talks about her hopes that the new German government will reframe its European policy. Its priorities in this process should be the European Green Deal, defending the rule of law and bolstering the EU’s capacity to act.
Saving biodiversity Published: 8 October 2021 With the 15th Conference of the Parties (COP 15) to the UN Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), the global community wants to make a new attempt to halt the rapid and dramatic loss of ecosystems, species and genetic diversity, or biodiversity.
COP 15 Published: 6 October 2021 At the 15th Conference of the Parties (COP 15) to the UN Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) in Kunming, China, the course is set for or against the conservation of biodiversity.
Green Hydrogen Published: 4 May 2022 Within the energy transition, international trade in green hydrogen and its derivatives will play an important role. But what opportunities and risks does this entail for exporting countries in the global South? What framework is needed to ensure that investments and trade develop from the start with sustainability in mind? The Heinrich Böll Foundation and Bread for the World are exploring these questions in a joint project.
10 Things You Need To Know About Hydrogen Published: 4 October 2021 The EU and Germany aim to be climate neutral by 2050 and 2045, respectively. The commitment to climate neutrality means that zero-emission alternatives will replace emissions-intensive processes and products. One energy alternative is climate-friendly hydrogen. However, hydrogen is not an all-purpose miracle that solves everything at once.
Keynote at the Budapest Forum on Building Sustainable Democracies Published: 30 September 2021 From 15-17 September 2021, the Budapest Forum gathered local decision-makers from Europe and beyond on how to strengthen sustainable democracies. Combatting the climate crisis including the participation of civil society will be key to sustain democratic liberties for the generations to come, said Dr. Ellen Ueberschär in her keynote on the panel 'People's power vs Climate crisis'.
Proposals for detoxifying the debate culture: Less disinformation and hate in the election campaign Published: 30 September 2021 The German parliamentary election campaign played out on the internet as never before. In the midst of the coronavirus pandemic, this was certainly necessary, but it brought with it all the evils we have previously seen in US election campaigns: disinformation campaigns and hate speech were used to discredit candidates, paid political online advertising and foreign influence circumvented basic democratic values.
A brief analysis of the German federal election 2021 Published: 29 September 2021 Germany has voted. The SPD, Greens and FDP come out of the elections as the winners, but take a very different view of the results – depending on their expectations and the pressure they feel upon them to act. By and large, the trend towards a party system in which no single party dominates continues. Constituency seats played a very particular role in these elections. This brief analysis provides an overview of the initial results, with a more comprehensive, empirical analysis to follow in the next few days.